If I can be anything…
If I can have any talent in the world, I would want to be musically gifted. I would want to be a professional musician. I want to play the violin beautifully. Every time I listen to Vivaldi or Corelli, Sarasate or Paganini, I’m moved to tears.
I want to one day play a violin concerto with a famous orchestra. If only I had the talent and the drive….
played this at my 6th grade talent show with a friend. Good times :)
SOBBING BECAUSE I LOVE YOU MOM.
so true.
(Source: carlop, via kellyfromthecity)
I love you guys
Complicated delivery
Our journey back to Kitchanga was difficult. On the morning of our departure, we received a 17 year old girl, Nina, at our health center in Kivuye. Nina was pregnant and her contractions had started the night before. Unfortunately, the baby’s head was in an occipito-transverse position and the labour was failing to progress. This means that the baby’s head was stuck in the pelvis. The road conditions were bad…
We finally arrived after a 3 hour drive. We were received by one of obstetricians, Dr Marie-Josee. Nina was swiftly wheeled into the delivery room. The baby’s head was just visible. The ventouse was tried three times without success. Just before we decided to go for a caesarean section, Nina pushed for the final time. A midwife quickly clambered onto some steps and applied fundal pressure, pressing hard as Nina grunted and cried out. All of a sudden, a little baby girl popped out. She was blue and the cord was around her neck. After brief but intense stimulation, we heard the welcome sound of a baby’s cry.
Nina is now doing ok but both mother and baby are still in hospital. She is actually one of the lucky ones… Happy stories like Nina give us just enough hope to smile and square up to another day.
Xx
Angie Angeline Wee is a Family Physician working in Kitchanga in the North Kivu province of Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. This is her second mission with MSF.
(via inspiring-pictures)
